“They are looking around our resource centre and asking if anybody could start with them right then and there,” said Mike Champigny, client services manager at Community Futures North Okanagan.

The latest data from Statistics Canada for the Thompson-Okanagan region had the unemployment rate at just 4.7 per cent in December.

That’s the lowest it has been since the summer of 2015.

A graph showing the unemployment rate in the Thompson-Okanagan over the last five years.

“What it means right now is a lot of pain for employers, and that limits our production and our prosperity here,” said Champigny.

“We are hearing from restaurants that have to adjust their hours. They are closing early, they can’t find dishwashers, servers, cooks.”

At the job centre, staff are finding both skilled and unskilled workers are in demand.

“There is just not enough people to do the work here and then you throw in some other factors like affordable housing being so scarce, and that limits new people from moving into the area to fill some of these jobs,” Champigny said.

However, despite the low unemployment rate, the search isn’t always easy for those looking for work.

“[In] hospitality, it is tough to get a wage that is liveable,” said Derek Thompson, who is looking for a job.

Back at Natural Factors, the expanding business is hoping to fill dozens of empty positions with a job fair this Friday and Saturday.

“It is challenging. We have definitely had a lot of challenges but we also have identified that we need to do more to let people know that we are a great employer and we are out here right in the Okanagan,” Suleiman said.

While it’s normally job hunters who must promote themselves, these days it’s employers who are putting their best face forward as they compete for the available labour pool.